Off the wire
Xinhua China news advisory -- June 3  • Garden festival kicks off in Ireland, attracts residents, visitors  • Venezuela sends aid to Cuba after tropical storm Alberto  • Venezuela prepares list of political opponents to be freed from jail  • JSE edges weaker as firmer South African rand pulls down mines  • JSE closes lower as U.S. dollar continues to gain  • JSE closes higher buoyed by banks and general retailers  • Microsoft eyes establishing software start-up in Turkey  • Chinese mainland claims 6 of world's top 100 universities in latest THE rankings  • U.S.-EU trade war could "devastate" Irish whiskey industry: IWA  
You are here:   News/

Chinese astronomers complete over 71 percent of Milky Way observation project

Xinhua,September 16, 2019 Adjust font size:

<span style="font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 14px;">Chinese astronomers complete over 71 percent of Milky Way observation project - Xinhua | English.news.cn</span>

Chinese astronomers have completed about 71.4 percent of a grand project to paint a portrait of the vast Milky Way, according to the Qinghai station of the Purple Mountain Observatory of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

It's expected to take another four to five years to complete the whole project, named "Milky Way Imaging Scroll Painting," which was launched in 2011, said Lu Dengrong, a senior engineer at the station.

The Milky Way Imaging Scroll Painting project aims to probe the distribution, structure and physical properties of molecular clouds to get a relatively complete picture of the structure of the Milky Way, said Chinese astronomers.

"The project will change our understanding of our galaxy," Lu said.

The observation of the galaxy was carried out with a 13.7-meter millimeter-wave telescope located in the Gobi Desert at an altitude of 3,200 meters in northwest China's Qinghai Province.

The telescope is China's only large radio telescope working at the millimeter wave band, providing data for a series of key astronomical studies, and it is open to astronomers worldwide.

It is mainly used to study molecular clouds and the formation of stars, as well as planetary nebula, the evolution of stars and interstellar matter.